1.Pulmonary Tuberculosis Diagnosis: Where We Are?.
Hamed Ebrahimzadeh LEYLABADLO ; Hossein Samadi KAFIL ; Mehdi YOUSEFI ; Mohammad AGHAZADEH ; Mohammad ASGHARZADEH
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 2016;79(3):134-142
In recent years, in spite of medical advancement, tuberculosis (TB) remains a worldwide health problem. Although many laboratory methods have been developed to expedite the diagnosis of TB, delays in diagnosis remain a major problem in the clinical practice. Because of the slow growth rate of the causative agent Mycobacterium tuberculosis, isolation, identification, and drug susceptibility testing of this organism and other clinically important mycobacteria can take several weeks or longer. During the past several years, many methods have been developed for direct detection, species identification, and drug susceptibility testing of TB. A good understanding of the effectiveness and practical limitations of these methods is important to improve diagnosis. This review summarizes the currently-used advances in nonmolecular and molecular diagnostics.
Diagnosis*
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Mycobacterium tuberculosis
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Pathology, Molecular
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Tuberculosis
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Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant
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Tuberculosis, Pulmonary*
2.Sequential Surgical Treatment of Hemoptysis Caused by: A case report.
The Korean Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2001;34(7):569-573
We experienced a case of hemoptysis caused by bilateral upper lobe aspergilloma. He was 66 years old and had a history of old unclear pulmonary tuberculosis with irregular medication 20 years ago and intermittent hemoptysis for several years. In x-ray study, there was a bilateral upper lobe aspergilloma with cavity. He received bilateral wedge resection through thoracotomy with some interval to reduce postoperative complications. We selected the priorty of operation through the bronchoscope in the operation room. Both sides had the same pathology of aspergilloma and he was discharged after an uneventful postoperative course.
Aged
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Bronchoscopes
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Hemoptysis*
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Humans
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Pathology
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Postoperative Complications
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Thoracotomy
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Tuberculosis, Pulmonary
3.Diagnosis of Pulmonary Tuberculosis: Recent Advances and Diagnostic Algorithms.
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 2015;78(2):64-71
Pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) persists as a great public health problem in Korea. Increases in the overall age of the population and the rise of drug-resistant TB have reinforced the need for rapid diagnostic improvements and new modalities to detect TB and drug-resistant TB, as well as to improve TB control. Standard guidelines and recent advances for diagnosing pulmonary TB are summarized in this article. An early and accurate diagnosis of pulmonary TB should be established using chest X-ray, sputum microscopy, culture in both liquid and solid media, and nucleic acid amplification. Chest computed tomography, histopathological examination of biopsy samples, and new molecular diagnostic tests can be used for earlier and improved diagnoses, especially in patients with smear-negative pulmonary TB or clinically-diagnosed TB and drug-resistant TB.
Biopsy
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Diagnosis*
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Humans
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Korea
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Lung
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Microscopy
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Pathology, Molecular
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Public Health
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Sputum
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Thorax
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Tuberculosis
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Tuberculosis, Pulmonary*
4.Clinical Manifestations and Diagnosis of Extrapulmonary Tuberculosis.
Hee Jung YOON ; Young Goo SONG ; Woo Il PARK ; Jae Pil CHOI ; Kyung Hee CHANG ; June Myung KIM
Yonsei Medical Journal 2004;45(3):453-461
Since the diagnosis of extrapulmonary tuberculosis (EPT) is largely depended on the physician's suspicion in respect of the disease, we believed that it would be worthwhile to scrutinize the clinical characteristics of EPT. Thus, here we present retrospectively evaluated clinical manifestations of patients who were diagnosed as EPT cases in a tertiary referral care hospital. Medical records of 312 patients, diagnosed as having EPT at Yongdong Severance hospital from January 1997 to December 1999, were reviewed retrospectively. In total 312 patients, 149 (47.8%) males and 163 (52.2%) females aged from 13 years to 87 years, were included into this study. The most common site of the involvement was pleura (35.6%). The patients complained of localized symptoms (72.4%) more frequently than systemic symptoms (52.2%). The most common symptom was pain at the infected site (48.1%). Leukocytosis, anemia, and elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and C-reactive protein (CRP) were found in 12.8%, 50.3%, 79.3% and 63.1% of the patients, respectively. Twenty-four percent of the patients had underlying medical illnesses such as, diabetes mellitus or liver cirrhosis, or were over 60 years old. In 67.3% of patients, tuberculosis was suspected at the initial visit. However, tuberculosis was microbiologically proven in only 23.7% of the patients. The time interval from the symptom onset to the diagnosis varied, with the mean duration of the period 96 days. Pulmonary parenchymal abnormal lesions were found in 133 patients (42.6%) on chest radiographs. EPT has a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations, so it is difficult to diagnose it. Based on our studies, only 11.2% of the patients were confirmed as EPT. So it is important that the physician who first examines the patient should have a high degree of suspicion based on the chest radiography, localized or systemic symptoms and several laboratory parameters reviewed in this study.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Aged
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Biopsy
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Female
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Human
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Incidence
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Prevalence
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Retrospective Studies
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Tuberculosis/*epidemiology/*pathology/radiography
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Tuberculosis, Lymph Node/epidemiology/pathology/radiography
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Tuberculosis, Osteoarticular/epidemiology/pathology/radiography
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Tuberculosis, Pleural/epidemiology/pathology/radiography
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Tuberculosis, Pulmonary/epidemiology/pathology/radiography
5.Congenital Tuberculosis: Report of an Autopsy Case.
Journal of Korean Medical Science 1990;5(1):59-64
An autopsy case of congenital tuberculosis is described in a 41-day-old female infant who was born to a mother having active pulmonary tuberculosis. The primary complex was seen in the liver and portal lymph nodes, and there was a generalized miliary dissemination including lung, liver, spleen, pancreas, adrenals, thyroid, thymus, kidneys, brain, and bowel. The organism was confirmed to be Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The tubercles were histopathologically of various chronicity and characterized by massive caseation and fairly poor peripheral lymphohistiocytic reaction. Giant cell response was also minimal. It should be stressed that although rare, tuberculosis is still an important disease in Korea that can involve fetus or newborn infants if pregnant women are untreated or unnoticed for her tuberculosis.
Female
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Humans
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Infant, Newborn
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Mycobacterium tuberculosis/isolation & purification
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Organ Specificity
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Postmortem Changes
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Tuberculosis, Pulmonary/*congenital/diagnosis/pathology
6.Comparative Evaluation of the Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification Assay for Detecting Pulmonary Tuberculosis.
Chang Ki KIM ; Eun A CHO ; Dong Mi SHIN ; Sung Won CHOI ; So Youn SHIN
Annals of Laboratory Medicine 2018;38(2):119-124
BACKGROUND: Early detection of tuberculosis (TB) is challenging in resource-poor settings because of limited accessibility to molecular diagnostics. The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance of the loop-mediated isothermal amplification kit (TB-LAMP) for TB diagnosis compared with conventional and molecular tests. METHODS: A total of 290 consecutive sputum samples were collected from May till September, 2015. All samples were processed using the N-Acetyl-L-cysteine (NALC) NaOH method and tested by smear microscopy, solid and liquid culture, real-time PCR, and TB-LAMP. RESULTS: The sensitivity of TB-LAMP for smear-positive and smear-negative samples with culture positivity was 92.0% and 58.8%, respectively. TB-LAMP was positive in 14.9% of TB culture-negative samples; however, all those samples were also positive by real-time PCR. In addition, none of the samples positive for nontuberculous mycobacteria by culture were positive by TB-LAMP. The overall agreement between TB-LAMP and real-time PCR was good; however, the concordance rate was significantly lower for real-time PCR positive samples with Ct values of 30–35. CONCLUSIONS: TB-LAMP could replace smear microscopy and increase TB diagnostic capacity when Xpert MTB/RIF is not feasible because of poor infrastructure.
Acetylcysteine
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Diagnosis
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Methods
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Microscopy
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Nontuberculous Mycobacteria
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Pathology, Molecular
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Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction
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Sensitivity and Specificity
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Sputum
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Tuberculosis
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Tuberculosis, Pulmonary*
7.Cystic changes associated with pulmonary tuberculosis: a case report.
Hou-rong CAI ; Min CAO ; Fan-qing MENG ; Wei-chun LI
Chinese Medical Journal 2006;119(13):1125-1128
8.Evaluation of Lymph Nodes in Patients with Concurrent Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma and Cervical Tuberculous Lymphadenitis.
Eun Wook CHUNG ; Young Soo CHANG ; Jungbok LEE ; Sung Yong CHOI ; Nak Joon LEE ; Yoon Kyoung SO ; Han Sin JEONG
Korean Journal of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery 2012;55(9):571-577
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: To determine the diagnostic clues to differentiate tuberculous lymph node infection from nodal metastasis in patients with both papillary thyroid carcinoma and cervical tuberculous lymphadenitis. SUBJECTS AND METHOD: We retrospectively reviewed 11 patients suffering concurrently from papillary thyroid carcinomas with cervical tuberculous lymphadenitis. Nine of the 11 patients underwent preoperative neck ultrasonography (US) and seven CT scans. Using the surgical pathology as the reference standards, the results of the preoperative diagnostic tools were re-evaluated according to lymph node level-based analysis. US and CT features were also compared between metastatic nodes and tuberculous lymphadenitis. RESULTS: Preoperative CT could localize the involved lymph node levels and differentiate tuberculous infection from metastasis of thyroid carcinoma in only two of seven patients. The site of the involved lymph nodes, the presence of pulmonary tuberculosis, and the tumor volume of the thyroid carcinoma were the clues to diagnose the lymph node status. However, in five of seven cases, CT could not differentiate tuberculosis from metastasis in the lymph nodes. The morphological characteristics of lymph nodes seen on CT and US did not differ between tuberculous infection and metastasis of papillary thyroid carcinomas. CONCLUSION: Pre-operative CT or US does not provide differential information about lymph node status between tuberculous infection and metastasis in patients with concurrent papillary thyroid carcinomas and cervical tuberculous lymphadenitis. Rather, clinical characteristics such as the site of the involved lymph nodes, the primary tumor burden, and the associated clinical features can help the physician differentiate between them.
Carcinoma
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Humans
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Lymph Nodes
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Lymphatic Metastasis
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Neck
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Neoplasm Metastasis
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Pathology, Surgical
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Retrospective Studies
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Stress, Psychological
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Thyroid Gland
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Thyroid Neoplasms
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Tuberculosis
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Tuberculosis, Lymph Node
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Tuberculosis, Pulmonary
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Tumor Burden
9.Analysis of clinical manifestations and diagnosis of 102 children with bronchial tuberculosis.
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2012;50(10):737-739
OBJECTIVEMost of Endobronchial tuberculosis (EBTB) of children is caused by the bronchial erosion from the scrofula close to the bronchus. Due to its complicated mechanism, pediatricians have limited knowledge on the endobronchial tuberculosis, which makes the misdiagnosis rate high. This work explored the clinical features and diagnostic methods of endobronchial tuberculosis (EBTB), to improve the understanding of this disease.
METHODA total of 102 cases with endobronchial tuberculosis (EBTB) were investigated by analyzing clinical and bronchoscopic features, imaging manifestation, PPD results and etiological examination; 71 cases were male, 33 were female, the youngest was 4 months old, and the oldest was 10 years old. The patients were treated in the fourth ward of the Department of Internal Medicine, Beijing Children's Hospital, Capital Medical University.
RESULTOf the 102 cases, 71 (69.6 percent) were infants and young children. (1) Age and clinical presentation: Infants and young children were more common, the main clinical manifestations were fever and cough, physical examination may find decreased breath sounds, wet and dry rale and wheezing. (2) In 81 cases who received CT there was bronchial obstruction, in 43 cases there were simultaneous manifestations of primary pulmonary tuberculosis (mediastinal and hilar lymph node enlargement and/or pulmonary consolidation), 21 cases had only manifestations of primary tuberculo. (3) The results of PPD: the positive rate was 95%. (4) Bronchoscopic feature: presence of mucosal swelling, caseous necrosis, bronchial stenosis/extrabronchial compression, granulomatous lesions and lymph node bronchial fistula. (5) Bacteriologic results: 21 patients were bacteriologically positive.
CONCLUSIONBronchial tuberculosis was more common in infants and young children, their major clinical manifestations were fever, cough, common findings on lung imaging was mediastinal and hilar lymph node enlargement and/or pulmonary consolidation, bronchial obstruction should be considered manifestations of bronchial tuberculosis, positive PPD should support the clinical diagnosis. Diagnosis can be confirmed by positive bacteriological tests.
Bronchi ; pathology ; Bronchial Diseases ; diagnosis ; pathology ; Bronchoscopy ; Child ; Child, Preschool ; Female ; Humans ; Infant ; Male ; Pulmonary Atelectasis ; diagnosis ; pathology ; Retrospective Studies ; Tomography, X-Ray Computed ; Tuberculin Test ; Tuberculosis ; diagnosis ; pathology ; Tuberculosis, Pulmonary ; complications ; diagnosis
10.A Case of chronic necrotizing pulmonary aspergillosis with pulmonary artery aneurysm.
Hwi Jong KIM ; Hyo Young CHUNG ; Soo Hee KIM ; Ji Chul YUN ; Jong Deog LEE ; Young Sil HWANG
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 2000;49(1):105-110
Pulmonary aspergillosis is classified as a saprophytic, allergic, and invasive disease. Chronic necrotizing pulmonary aspergillosis is categorized as an invasive pulmonary aspergillosis. Most invasive pulmonary aspergillosis have acute and toxic clinical features but chronic necrotizing pulmonary aspergillosis is characterized by a sub-acute infection, most commonly seen in patients with altered local defense system from preexisting pulmonary disease of in mild immunocompromised patients. Pulmonary artery aneurysm due to this infection is termed as a mycotic aneurysm, etiology of which are tuberculosis, syphilis, bacteria and fungus. We report a case chronic necrotizing pulmonary aspergillosis complicating pulmonary aneurysm is a 62 year-old man who was presented with cough, sputum, and fever. Chest radiographs showed a rapid, progressive cavitary lesion and pulmonary artery aneurysm. Angioinvastion of aspergillus was revealed by pathology after operative removal of left upper lobe containing the pulmonary artery aneurysm. He was treated with itraconazole.
Aneurysm*
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Aneurysm, Infected
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Aspergillus
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Bacteria
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Cough
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Fever
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Fungi
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Humans
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Immunocompromised Host
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Invasive Pulmonary Aspergillosis*
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Itraconazole
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Lung Diseases
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Pathology
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Pulmonary Artery*
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Pulmonary Aspergillosis
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Radiography, Thoracic
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Sputum
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Syphilis
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Tuberculosis